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I'm not sure if this is against the unwritten moral code of estate agents but I was suprised recently when my wife and I bid on a home we looked at & loved and the bid was turned down by the estate agent saying it was unreasonable.
The 'guide price' was 300K and we offered 285K since our threshold wasn't too far off the asking price and didn't want to start the bidding too high. We we're the first offer in by the way (and FTBs as well, fyi).
Anyway, the estate agent said she couldn't accept that offer and reminded me the guide price was 300K. I said I realised what the guide price was but explained basically what I said above.
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However, if the EA was really working for the tenent, wouldn't they have done everything they could have to prevent us from seeing the burnt out car. Throw a tarp over it, cancel the appointment, have it towed, etc.
Again, I think it all comes back to customer service - no matter who you are actually getting paid by.
What has that got to do with the original issue? And who knows the reason why the car was burnt - it could simply have been an accident presumably?However, in the interest of full disclosure there was a burnt out car in the car park the day we went to look at the property. We we're hoping it was a once off
Where was the house you were looking at - burnt out cars doesnt portray up and coming to me!
Most "up and coming" estates in dublin have had mre than one car burnt outside them
Personally everywhere I have lived in Dublin right up to now has had this occurance on occasion.
Not one of these areas would I, the gen public or prices of property deem, for want of a better word, to be a slum area.
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